One of the "backpack"-equipped remote-control Madagascar hissing cockroaches

The NCSU team has already successfully used the technology to guide cockroaches along curved lines on the floor

Scientists from North Carolina State University are working on remotely controlable sensor-equipped cockroaches

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Article Summary

Much to the annoyance of home-owners everywhere, cockroaches are amazingly tough, and they’re able to squeeze into remarkably small spaces. These are some of the same qualities that researchers would like to see in tiny reconnaissance robots that could perform tasks such as searching earthquake-damaged buildings for survivors. Such adaptable, robust mini-robots would be quite challenging to create, however. A team of scientists from North Carolina State University are working on an alternative – sensor-equipped real cockroaches that are remotely controlled by human operators.